As community members mourn the death of Charleena Lyles, the 30-year-old pregnant woman killed by Seattle cops Sunday morning, the primary day-after insights into her life are the words of her family members and the court documents detailing previous interactions with police.

Sorrowful and, at times, angry sentiments have poured in throughout the day Monday from groups representing gun safety, people with disabilities, people of color and the low-income housing provider that managed her apartment.

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Lyles was shot outside her fourth-floor apartment in the Brettler Family Place complex in Sand Point, managed by Solid Ground. She reportedly called authorities to report a burglary. Police say she then brandished a knife, prompting the fatal gunfire from officers.

Audio released by the Seattle Police Department indicate Lyles was flagged with a safety caution for cops, based on a recent incident in which she reportedly confronted cops with metal shears earlier this month. She pleaded guilty to two counts harassment and obstructing a police officer and was released from jail Wednesday.

On Monday night the Seattle Police Department also released the video from the dashcam and the hallway outside of Lyles's apartment.

However, family members have described Lyles as suffering from an increasingly worrisome mental health struggle. Officers who responded to the burglary call looked for a mental health caution on her file, but found none, according to the audio recording.

The officer safety tag, however, required that two officers respond to her call instead of one, which is more typical.

The recording depicts officers chatting with Lyles about the burglary call. She claimed an Xbox was taken from her apartment.

Then, in a matter of seconds, an officer can be heard repeating, "Get back! Get back!" before shots are fired.

"She loved her kids to death, she was always the life of the party and had a smile on her face ... I loved her so much," her older sister, Monika Williams, said.

Dozens gathered outside the apartment building later Sunday to mourn Lyles.

Solid Ground, which offers housing assistance to vulnerable people and manages the Brettler complex, issued a statement to include the following:

"As a community, Solid Ground is sick with grief for Charleena's family and loved ones....We call for justice for Charleena. We call for accountability, starting with what we could have done better for Charleena, as well as how the police and other systems that are supposed to support and protect people did not. She called for help and she was shot."

"This event has traumatized the family, our residents, staff and the broader community. It threatens long-term harm with relationships and trust in law enforcement and other systems."

The organization brought in grief counselors to work with family members and residents.

Police were also called to Lyles's apartment June 5 on reports of a domestic disturbance.

Officers found Lyles in her apartment, armed with "extra long metal shears," threatening officers, according to the incident report.

She was seated on a couch with a young child and two officers drew their service pistols, commanding her to drop the scissors, reports say. At one point, she allegedly stood up with the scissors in hands and said, "Ain't none of y'all leaving here today."

She also made comments of a religious nature, claimed to want to "morph into a wolf," and called the officers devils and members of the Ku Klux Klan, according to the police report.

Additional officers arrived and persuaded her to drop the scissors.

Family members expressed surprise at her behavior while talking with cops and "has not had any behavior similar to this in the past," police wrote.

Her family described a "recent sudden and rapid decline in her mental health" and hoped to stabilize her condition.

"It is heartbreaking and unacceptable that Charleena Lyles died at the hands of those she had called on to help her," said Jay Ruderman, president of the Boston-based Ruderman Family Foundation, which advocates for people with disabilities. "It is imperative that our police officers are ready and trained to serve and protect all members of our community and not endanger our most vulnerable populations—people with disabilities."

Seattle police overhauled their use of force policies under federal supervision after the Department of Justice admonished the agency for excessive deployment of force.

During a 28-month span from 2014 to 2016, incidents in which Seattle cops used force that caused or could be expected to cause injury dropped at least 60 percent, compared to a similar period from 2009 to 2011, according to the Associated Press.

However, social justice advocates claim that Lyles's death symbolizes a failure of those reforms.

"There is no question that the Seattle police department could have and should have used de-escalation tactics, instead of shooting first and asking questions later," wrote Kristin Rowe-Finkeiner, Seattle-based director and CEO of MomsRising. "It is clear that the 'historic reforms' within the Seattle police department, a department with a long record of racially discriminatory violence, have fallen far short of what was needed to keep Lyles and her family safe."

The officers involved in the shooting have not yet been identified, but were placed on paid leave, per agency policy.

The department's Force Investigation Team and Office of Professional accountability are gathering evidence in the case. An external inquest by King County is sure to come.